Eazy-E enjoyed only a brief recording career, but the few albums and EPs he did release -- on his own as well as with his group,
N.W.A -- were tremendously influential, setting the stage for the proliferation of West Coast
gangsta rap in the early '90s. Showcasing some of the pioneering gangsta's most influential recordings,
Eternal E serves as a summary of
Eazy's solo highlights, including a couple
N.W.A songs but only ones that were solo showcases. You get the standout songs from
Eazy's debut album,
Eazy-Duz-It (1988), as well as the bulk of his follow-up EP,
5150 Home 4 tha Sick (1992). But
Eternal E stops there, unfortunately not including anything from the first-rate
It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa EP or the third-rate
Str8 off tha Streetz album. (
Eazy's label,
Ruthless, left its parent label,
Priority, at this point, and
Eternal E is a
Priority release, meaning that post-
Priority recordings such as those on
It's On would have to be licensed for inclusion here -- a price the label seems unwilling to pay.) Even if
Eternal E doesn't round up a full career retrospective, it does feature
Eazy's key songs, namely his earliest ones, which boasted cutting-edge production work by
Dr. Dre. So this best-of does serve its purpose fairly well, and might be the only
Eazy album you'll need. Still, if it's one and only one
Eazy album you want, you'd be better off with
Priority's
Eazy-Duz-It reissue from 2002, which includes that entire album plus the entire
5150 EP appended as bonus tracks -- giving you mostly everything here and much more. Either way though, you're getting a good portrait of
Eazy's best solo music, with the exception of the
It's On EP, which you'll definitely want to hear if you're a fan. [In 2005
Priority issued a Gangsta Memorial Edition that goes a long way toward making
Eternal E definitive. Like the 2003 reissue, this edition adds a song each from
It's On and
Str8 (a move that is still cheap and still leaves more to be desired, but is better than nothing).] ~ Jason Birchmeier